The truth is that the iPhone is better now and it has always been the
superior choice for smartphone users, and not just for the hardware, but
for the ecosystem and cohesive experience that you are buying into when
you select a shiny new iPhone as your next personal gadget. Here are
five things that make the iPhone experience second to none.
1) Consistency
Choice is only a benefit when it’s meaningful choice, and while
Android’s massive number of devices from various manufacturers might
seem like a good thing, it results in a sub-par user experience for
many.
Take a look at the graph above. No, it’s not a collection of all the color swatches from Home Depot, it’s a chart showing Android fragmentation as of August 2014. Every single square you see is a different Android device, and according to research firm OpenSignal, there are over 18,000 of them. That’s 18,000 kinds of Android devices that developers have to worry about, which means things like optimization and universal support go straight out the window.
With
far fewer devices to consider, even going back as far as the iPhone 4
from 2010, developers making apps for iOS are able to actually test how
they work on each device, rather than waiting until enough users
complain of a device-specific bug as they so often do with Android apps.
On top of that, the iOS operating system is updated across the board on
devices three years old or newer, whereas many Android users are forced
to rely on manufacturers and wireless carriers to push updates out the
door.
2) The App Store
Speaking
of apps, Apple’s App Store is the place to be if you want the latest
updates on the best and brightest apps. Due to its fragmentation,
Android often plays second fiddle to iOS releases, and sometimes never
gets its own version of top-selling iOS apps. You want to play a hit
indie title like Monument Valley
on Android? Sure you can, you just have to wait until the iPhone gamers
have been enjoying it for over a month. How about insanely popular
games like the Infinity Blade series and Hearthstone: Heroes of Warcraft, or amazing apps like Dark Sky and Fling? Oh, Android never got any of those, sorry.
3) Malware marketplace
An extremely detailed report that was released earlier this year from security firm F-Secure (PDF)
declared that 99 percent of all mobile malware is targeted at Android
users. The platform’s fragmentation—which leads to updates not being
applied universally and a massive number of hacker-friendly
vulnerabilities that go untreated—is to blame. And it’s not just through
Web browsing that these malicious programs can end up on your Android
gadgets; You can download them directly through Google’s own app marketplace. Want a safer mobile experience? You’re going to end up with an iPhone.
4) No more crapware
When you buy an iPhone from the Apple Store it’s the exact same iPhone
that you’d get if you bought it at an AT&T store, a Verizon outlet,
or even at Wal-Mart. On the other hand, the same Android phone may offer
a completely different user experience depending on where you buy it,
as carriers and manufacturers absolutely love to cram useless programs,
utilities, and performance-hindering skins on top of what is otherwise a
perfectly functional operating system. In fact, many people who claim
to not like Android have probably never really used Android as it is
intended, but instead have fallen victim to what is collectively
referred to as “crapware.” That’s something you simply don’t have to
worry about with the iPhone.
5) Home base
Having been an iPhone user since 2008, and having upgraded each and
every year, I’ve had a total of two issues with my various iPhones.
One—I believe it was the iPhone 4S—had a faulty lock button which began
giving me trouble about a year after I bought it, and the other was an
iPhone 5 battery that couldn’t hold a charge. This is where the Apple
Store comes in handy, and it’s something Android users would know
nothing about.
Both
times that I ran into trouble I walked into my local Apple Store, gave
them my device and my Apple ID, and walked out with a brand new iPhone
within 15 minutes. No paperwork, no explanation, and not a single cent
was demanded of me—this is all despite the fact that my iPhone 5 was
particularly beat up, and had a rather large gash on the display. There
are people that like to poke fun at Apple Stores, their employees, and
the “cult” atmosphere of it all, but if it is a cult, it’s a remarkably
courteous one. Yes, both platforms have their plusses and minuses, and while the iPhone might only now be catching up—as it is with a larger display size and widgets—Android manufacturers certainly have a bit of work to do in their own right. Competition is good, and the fact that both platforms have loyal fanbases is a great thing. But the iPhone is better. Just saying.
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